Interesting that Thor should be placed ahead of the Hulk.  I seem to
remember an instance in which the Hulk startled Thor by being only the
second being, next to Thor, to be able to pick up and wield Mjolnir
and, if the only difference between the two is the mystical warhammer
forged and dovetailed by Dwarven blacksmiths, I am going with the
green guy!

~rave!

--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "Tracey de Morsella" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> From: don polite [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 1:32 PM
> To: Keith Johnson; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Aaron
> Holbert; Clayton Harrison; don polite; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Harvey
> George; Kenny Cash; Rodney Brown; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; The Holy Infinite
> Triumvirate; Wes
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Tracey de Morsella; Gabriel, Dexter; JohnScott
> Lucas; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: wow look who they say is no 1
> 
>  
> 
> May 23
> 
> 
>  <http://old-wizard.com/?p=728> Top 10 Most Powerful Superheroes of
All Time
> 
> 
> Written by old-wizard.com <http://www.old-wizard.com/>  
> 
> 5. The Hulk 
> 
> 
>  <http://old-wizard.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/5.jpg> 5.jpg
> 
> If World <http://old-wizard.com/?p=228>  War Hulk showed us
anything, its
> just how powerful the Hulk is. Never mind the fact that in Hulk
#470, he was
> choked out by an ordinary python, or that he was once injured by
Wolverine's
> bone claws. We at Old-Wizard simply attribute that to poor writing.
At his
> best, the Hulk is a 7-foot, one-ton green behemoth with near-unlimited
> strength, rapid tissue-regenerative powers and nigh-inexhaustible
stamina.
> He is highly resistant to physical, as well as psychic attacks. He's
been
> shown to be immune to temperature extremes, diseases, and poisons. His
> powerful legs allow him to leap into Earth's upper atmosphere, or even
> across continents, and when injured he can heal from almost any wound,
> inherently embodying the most ubiquitous panacea. He has gone toe-to toe
> with almost all of Marvel's elite heroes and villains, and has
usually come
> out on top. All of his powers depend on how mad he is, and at his
maddest,
> his footsteps are enough to shake the entire Eastern Seaboard, and his
> punches capable of shattering small planets.
> 
> 4. Doctor Strange
> 
> 
>  <http://old-wizard.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/6.jpg> 6.jpg
> 
> Earth's Sorcerer Supreme, Doctor Steven Strange, has unparalleled
sagicity
> of the mystic arts, and stands as humanity's first and last line of
defense
> against all magic-based menaces that threaten our dimension. In
addition to
> being able to perform such feats as astral projection, telepathy, and
> hypnotism, he also has a number of combat related powers as well. He can
> fire energy bolts with potentially enough power to destroy an entire
planet
> (ala Death Star), create impenetrable protective shields, teleport and
> perform telekinesis. Basically, Strange can do anything that the
writer can
> imagine. There are no rules. He can even withstand the power of the
infinity
> gauntlet. There seems to be no clear limitations on his powers. He
can snuff
> out the feeble flame of any mortal's soul with the mere twitch of his
> finger, and stop or even turn back time itself. Doctor Strange clearly
> stands amongst Marvel's elite heroes.
> 
> 3. Superman
> 
> 
>  <http://old-wizard.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/7.jpg> 7.jpg
> 
> Rocketed from the exploding planet Krypton by his scientist parents, and
> crash-landing on the planet Earth, Kal-El grew to adulthood on a small
> Kansas farm, raised by the wholesome Kent family. Raised as Clark
Kent, once
> puberty set in he learned that his adopted planet's yellow sun and
weaker
> gravity gave him powers far beyond those a mere mortal man. Endowed with
> brazen strength, speed, and senses, not to mention flight, heat
vision, and
> the ability to blow hurricane force winds and near-invulnerability,
he moved
> to Metropolis and started calling himself Superman, where he fights for
> truth, justice and the American way! Superman practically has every
super
> power you can imagine, or want (X-ray vision, wink wink, nudge
nudge), which
> puts him in a league of his own. In addition to possessing all of these
> powers, time and time again, Superman has gone up against villains many
> times more powerful than himself, magic-wielders and even villains using
> kryptonite against him, and yet he always comes out on top. Somehow that
> square always finds a way to win.
> 
> 2. The Silver Surfer
> 
> 
>  <http://old-wizard.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/8.jpg> 8.jpg
> 
> The Silver Surfer is the on-again, off-again herald of Galactus.
These two
> are the Ross and Rachel of the cosmos. And like all heralds of
Galactus, the
> Silver Surfer possesses the power cosmic, an energy source capable
of doing
> almost anything, from re-arranging molecules, to energy blasts, to
bringing
> people back from the dead. With the Silver Surfer it's more of a
question of
> what he can't do, than what he can. He has enormous strength, can fly at
> speed, and is nearly invulnerable (he has withstood the destructive
power of
> stars and even black holes). He is virtually in-destructible, and only
> characters near his power level are capable of harming him. He can
navigate
> through space, dimensional barriers, and hyperspace at will. He has even
> been depicted as capable of time travel on several occasions. Riding his
> board which is capable of traveling through space, made of the same
> cosmically powered silver material as his skin, and mentally linked
to him,
> he's almost unbeatable. Almost. 
> 
> 1. Thor
> 
> 
>  <http://old-wizard.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/9.jpg> 9.jpg
> 
> Here he is, the Norse god of Thunder himself. There are those who will
> probably question putting Thor ahead of the Silver Surfer on our
list, and
> yet the two have fought each other twice in the comics, and both
times Thor
> has come out on top. As an Asgardian, Thor is immortal, possesses
> tendentious strength, and well nigh-invulnerability. He is also
armed with
> Mjolnir, the mystical warhammer forged and dovetailed by Dwarven
> blacksmiths, it is capable of opening passage ways through space and
time,
> blocking all sorts of energy blasts, and bending the elements to its
> master's will. This guy is a norse warrior god, trained and skilled
in the
> arts of battle, and he's been doing it for countless ages. And now
that Thor
> has accepted his heritage as the child of Elder goddess Gaea, he now has
> mastery over the earth itself, allowing him to manipulate it to his
will as
> well. Give this erudite god a mystical warhammer, and power over the
earth
> and the elements, and he's unstoppable
> 
>  
> 
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: Keith Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: don polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Aaron Holbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Clayton
> Harrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; don polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Harvey George <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
> Kenny Cash <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Rodney Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]; The Holy Infinite Triumvirate
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Wes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Tracey de Morsella
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Gabriel, Dexter"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; JohnScott Lucas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Monday, July 14, 2008 8:53:49 PM
> Subject: Re: Hulk Fans rise up
> 
> We discussed this a while back. One asks, though, if Sentry was trully
> defeated or *wanted* to be defeated. Recall that Sentry started
freaking out
> and seemed to want to be taken down. His major weakness, remember,
is his
> own paranoia, and the fact that he's literally given form to his inner
> doubts and fears. I couldn't honestly tell if Hulk actually won or
if Robert
> let him beat him. Also, both reverted to human form. Could it be
that "power
> of a million blazing suns" Sentry could also have powered up again,
just as
> Banner did?
> 
> Also, I always new Hulk's strength level was said to be potentially
> limitless, but i'm still finding it hard to believe the full effects
of one
> gamma bomb makes him more powerful than Sentry.
> 
>  
> 
> -------------- Original message -------------- 
> From: don polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
> 
> peace brothers hopefully this will answer the old debate.  me and my son
> pick up a book base on the story world hulk. AND IN THE BOOK IT
STATES THAT
> THE SENTRY FINALLY FOUND A REASON TO UNLEASH HIS FULL POWER AND THAT WAS
> AGAINST THE HULK AND IN THE END OF THE BATTLE THE SENTRY WAS
DEFEATED WHILE
> THE HULK RETURN TO TO BRUCE BANNER.
> 
>  
> 
> CHICO XX
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> ----- Original Message ----
> From: CINQUE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Aaron Holbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Clayton
> Harrison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; don polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; don polite
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Harvey George
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Kenny Cash <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Rodney
> Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; [EMAIL PROTECTED]; The Holy Infinite
> Triumvirate <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; Wes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Tracey de Morsella
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Gabriel, Dexter"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; JohnScott Lucas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2008 6:07:55 AM
> Subject: Hulk Fans rise up
> 
> Latest "Hulk" may not spawn a sequel
> Wednesday July 9 1:17 AM ET
> 
> It's a tale of two movies, with an oddly similar ending. 
> 
> Five years ago, "Hulk," the first movie based on Marvel's hulking green
> comic book character, rang up $245 million in worldwide box office
but was
> widely dismissed as a commercial failure. 
> 
> The second attempt, "The Incredible Hulk," amped up the fun factor and
> dialed down the brooding of director Ang Lee's original but is
unlikely to
> gross significantly higher than its predecessor and might not spawn a
> sequel. And it's been dubbed a success. 
> 
> What gives? 
> 
> "We're happy with the financial results, even if they (only) reach
the first
> film's levels," a Marvel insider insisted. "Having a sequel is not the
> definition of success." 
> 
> That's fortunate, as even outpacing the first film's worldwide haul
by 10%
> looks optimistic at this point, and that's not likely to stoke
enthusiasm
> for a franchise follow-up anytime soon. 
> 
> After four weekends, the Louis Leterrier-directed "The Incredible
Hulk" has
> earned $125 million, the same as what "Hulk" had pulled in at the
same time
> in its run. "Hulk" finished with $132 million, and its successor is
unlikely
> to do much better. 
> 
> Its foreign rollout is still in progress, with comics-friendly Japan
among
> the territories the remake has yet to bow, but it appears likely
that the
> Edward Norton starrer will struggle to reach $130 million
internationally.
> The first film tallied $113.2 million overseas. 
> 
> Action films tend to outperform internationally, though comic book
> adaptations can be a different matter if the fan base skews
American. Marvel
> touts the Hulk comic franchise as its second most popular worldwide,
after
> Spider-Man. 
> 
> "All we can say as a studio is that we are very pleased with the
result,"
> Universal domestic distribution president Nikki Rocco said. 
> 
> Despite the similarity of the Hulk films' theatrical runs, industryites
> suggest the lighter tone of the second film makes it more the vehicle to
> generate sequels, and some suggest the remake will prove a more
lucrative
> DVD title than the Eric Bana-starring original. On the other hand,
> production costs and marketing expenses were steeper the second time
around,
> totaling more than $200 million. The first film cost about $150
million to
> make. 
> 
> Still, the dark original so turned off the Hulk character's fanboy
base as
> to require a complete reworking of its big-screen rendering before a
film
> franchise could be christened. 
> 
> But Marvel has yet to greenlight a Hulk sequel. So other observers
suggest
> the films' most important distinction lies simply in how well market
> expectations were managed in advance of their respective bows. 
> 
> "Hollywood is always about perception," said David Davis, managing
partner
> and entertainment analyst at Arpeggio Partners in Los Angeles. "The
first
> Hulk (movie) had such high expectations after the NBC-Universal
merger and
> was supposed to be critical-favorite Ang Lee's breakout commercial
> blockbuster. 
> 
> "Then with the new Hulk film, Marvel was able to underplay the
importance of
> the success after the great success of 'Iron Man' this summer,"
Davis said.
> "So the new one overdelivered, relative to its underpromise." 
> 
> The Marvel-produced, Paramount-distributed "Iron Man" has fetched
more than
> $563 million at the worldwide box office. 
> 
> Reuters/Hollywood Reporter 
> 
>  
> 
>  
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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